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Freud: the man and the cause
The book opens with a vivid account of Freud's traumatic upbringing in Moravia and its influence on the birth of psychoanalysis and reveals the truth about his first and only calf-love in which he 'translated esteem for the mother into friendship for the daughter'. It records the influence of Freud's youth two-month visit to England where he decided that man could 'work miracles in alleviating physical ills if he were scientist enough to try new methods of treatment', and his devotion to the to the entire Freud family., revealed in scores of intimate letters to his nephew in England. It gives an explanation of what actually lies behind 'the dream of Irma's injection', the most famaus examples in Freud's 'The Interpretation of Dreams'. It elucidates Freud's warnings against the dangers of psycho-biography.
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